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View synonyms for many

many

[ men-ee ]

adjective

, more, most.
  1. constituting or forming a large number; numerous:

    many people.

    Synonyms: various, sundry, divers, myriad, multitudinous, multifarious

    Antonyms: single, few

  2. noting each one of a large number (usually followed by a or an ):

    For many a day it rained.



noun

  1. a large or considerable number of persons or things:

    A good many of the beggars were blind.

  2. the many, the greater part of humankind.

pronoun

  1. many persons or things:

    Many of the beggars were blind. Many were unable to attend.

many

/ ˈmɛnɪ /

determiner

  1. sometimes preceded bya great or a good
    1. a large number of

      many coaches

      many times

    2. ( as pronoun; functioning as plural )

      many are seated already

  2. foll bya, an, or another, and a singular noun each of a considerable number of

    many a man

  3. preceded byas, too, that, etc
    1. a great number of

      too many clouds to see

      as many apples as you like

    2. ( as pronoun; functioning as plural )

      I have as many as you



noun

  1. See few
    the many
    the many the majority of mankind, esp the common people Compare few

    the many are kept in ignorance while the few prosper

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Other Words From

  • over·many adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of many1

First recorded before 900; Middle English mani, meni, Old English manig, menig; akin to Old Saxon, Old High German manag, menig, Danish mange, Gothic manags

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Word History and Origins

Origin of many1

Old English manig; related to Old Frisian manich, Middle Dutch menech, Old High German manag

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Idioms and Phrases

  • as many
  • good (great) many
  • in so many words
  • irons in the fire, too many
  • so many
  • too many cooks spoil the broth

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Synonym Study

Many, innumerable, manifold, numerous imply the presence or succession of a large number of units. Many is a popular and common word for this idea: many times. Numerous, a more formal word, refers to a great number or to very many units: letters too numerous to mention. Innumerable denotes a number that is beyond count or, more loosely, that is extremely difficult to count: the innumerable stars in the sky. Manifold implies not only that the number is large but also that there is variety or complexity.

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Example Sentences

Like many trans users, Transartist often gets used as a source of information more than anything else.

But he, like many people using dating apps whatever their sexual identity, remains stoutly positive.

Like many Americans—but few Republican presidential candidates—the former Florida governor has evolved on the issue.

In an email exchange a friend said many had repeated this same succinct review but they could never elaborate.

For many years afterward it was a never-ending topic of conversation, and is more or less talked of even to this day.

And she would be wearing some of the jewels with the white dress—just a few, not many, of course.

Many of them were delicious in the role; one of them was the embodiment of every womanly grace and charm.

Only in the carnage of the head, the tilt of the chin, was the insolence expressed that had made her many enemies.

As there are still many varieties of the plant grown in America, so there doubtless was when cultivated by the Indians.

Babylas raised his pale face; he knew what was coming; it had come so many times before.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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